English, asked by dipalimane445, 2 months ago

write an essay on your (one wish that you want to fullfill on this coming birthday of your's​

Answers

Answered by patelved180
1

Answer:

I wish for complete world peace — a world free from fighting, from conflict, and from endless hatred based on outer differences, religious disputes or ethnic diversities. Is that not the highest possible ideal and principle? Regardless of what race or country you belong to, and what ideology you believe in? Millions — possibly billions — of innocent lives have been destroyed throughout history in thousands upon thousands of meaningless wars because humanity has been unable to evolve past its primitive instincts. Humanity could be reaching for the stars — but it is still fighting among each other. If aliens were watching this planet, they would be shaking their heads and silently laughing at us.

I wish for America to become a good country — it was originally founded as a nation built on noble ideals, for life, liberty and pursuit of happiness, with a messy background, perhaps — but its ideals were incredibly ahead of their time, and stood for the promise of something not necessarily perfect, but something genuinely better. America is supposed to be so much more than a country whose people hate each other and themselves — whose government is so corrupt that they have been chained to the industrial military complex for generations, and cannot stop waging war against other nations, coverly or otherwise. At the very least, its constant interference in the Middle East, with all its myriad and complicated problems, is honestly best avoided.

Regardless of what China is today, or whether or not you approve, in my opinion, China was always supposed to be a good nation — despite its imperfections, it always was meant to be a beacon of hope and freedom for the rest of humanity. Confucianism teaches us the importance of family, and morality, Taoism embodies the importance of cosmic and societal harmony, maintaining the balance in all things, and that different and opposite values are sometimes the most complementary. The ancient Chinese culture has always stood for something benevolent — a deep sense of fundamental wisdom and yearning for knowledge, something meant to be timeless and universal.

Similar questions